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Is there such a thing as equal­ity?
Faculty members o f the college
do not seem to-think so.
Prof. A. C. Peterson started the
ball a-rolling in his class in sociol­ogy
when he said that there was
no such thing, that human beings
are' all different from birth and
that the difference is largely due
to heredity.
In proof o f this, he said:
“ I f all the money in the country
were divided equally one day, it
would all be on its way bacl( into
exactly the same pockets inside o f
48 ,hours."
Tom 0 . Bellwood, 'dean o f the
college, agrees with ,-I*rof. Peter­son.
— ^iA&.long.aa.aur economic.sygtfim
is based on money, prices, and p rof­it,
Mr. Peterson’s statement is
true,” he said.
Although Dr. M ary H ill and Dr.
J. C. Reagan agree w ith Peterson
and Bellwood that the fe w would
said, "and i f the lucky ones had
their money taken from them, a
great many o f them would stay
poor fo r the rest o f their lives. I
am certain that new tycoons would
arise, however," she said.
Cast You r
Vote
Friday
Tuesday, April 25. 1933
NORTH UNIVERSITY LIBRARY L i \ i « n » \
Friday.
Published by Associated Students
A R IZ O N A S T A T E T E A C H E R S C O L L E G E , F L A G S T A F F . A R I Z O N A Winslow High
Wins First in Tournament
Flagstaff Places Second ^to
Carry Off -‘V eil wood
Cup Prize
Snowflake 3rd
150 Students from 10 Schools
A re Guests of Local
Teachers College
Placing first among 10 northern
Arizona schools participating in
the annual district music and com­mercial
subjects, Winslow won the
cup presented by the college with
a total o f 63 points. F la gstaff was
second with 57 points and Snow­flake
ranked third with 45.
The Bellwood cup, offered by
Dean Tom 0 . Bellwood o f the
teachers college, went to F la g staff
as leuder among the northern A r i­zona
high schools in the business
instruction field. The music cup
was won by Winslow.
Ten high schools— Snowflake,
Winslow, Clarkdale, F la gstaff, St.
Johns, Seligman, Jerome, Williams,
tfotbrook and Cani£ Verde— enter­ed
approximately ISO studejnts.
Miss Edna Dptson, commercial
teacher at the college, was general
chairman. She was assisted by
Prof. Eldon A rdrey o f the college
music department, Miss Klonda
Lynn oM ^ p college speech arts de-
- partment. Clarence Brooksby, c
graduate student at the college,
and J. P. McV ey, principal Flag-sta
ff high school and secretary
Northern Arizona Interscholastic
as.iocin*;on.
Trombone— 1, J. B. Patterson, St.
Johns; 2, Juan Munez, Jerome;' 3,
Max Butler, Snowflake. v
> ’ Bb Cornet or Trum pet—1, W a l­ter
Kehoe, Jerome; 2, J e ff Hunt,
Snowflake; 3, Gabriel Rodriquez,
Winslow; 4, Ildefonso Vallejo, i
Bb Clarinet— I, Robert Bremren,
Winslow; 2, Dorothy Harrington,
F la gstaff; 3, Trinidad Castaneda,
Jerome; 4, Wanda Peterson, Snow­flake.
Eb Saxaphone— 1, A rg y le Shum-way,
Snowflake; 2, Fred Waites,
Winslow; 3, Joe Mullen, Jerome;,4,
Harlie Goss, Williams.
Men’s high voice— 1, V irg il W riU
mg, St. Johns; 2, A r lo w Hunt.
Snowflake; 3, Phillips Isham, Flag-
* s ta ff; 4, D. McBride.
Men’s low voice— 1, Robert
Woodburn, W inslow; 2, Philip Cha­vez.
Jerome; 3, June Davis, St.
Johns; 4, J. C. Fain, Williams.
G irl’s high voice— 1, La Rue
Maybin, St. Johns; 2, M argaret
Rudd, W inslow; 3, Fern Standifird,
Snowflake; 4, H arriet Branting-lmm,
Williams.
G irl’s low voice— 1, Jean Rich­ardson,
F la g staff; 2, Frances Stev­ens,
Winslow; 3, Luana Hall,
Snowflake; 4, A m y Farr, St. Johns.
Piano— 1, M ary Hutson, F la g­s
taff; 2, Cleora Day, W inslow; 3,
Annella Morris, Snowflake; 4, Ev-elyn
Cummings, Camp Verde.
C O LL E G E ST U D E N T S
W IL L H A V E A N N U A L
L A K E M A R Y .P IC N IC
Plans are complete fo r the an­nual
college jic v ir . to be held at
Lary Mary Saturday. I t will
be an all day a ffa ir and various
forms o f amusement have been
arranged for during the day, to
be climaxed by a dance in the
evening.
Students and faculty num­bers
will leave in busses and pri­vate
cars at nine o’clock in the
morning. The busses will make
two trips. * Students having pri­vate
cars are asked to cooperate
with Roland Hen'shaw and re­port
any room that they may
have.
A s in form er years, the com­mittees
are working to make
this the big event of the spring.
The picnic w ill last all day. A r ­rangements
have been made for
baseball, volleyball, horseshoes,
boating, umMf-ouyuivu U bra.vt*
enough they may indulge in a
swim. The food committee has
been busy getting a real feed
together.
Heads o f committees for the
A ffair * are Roland. Henshaw,
transportation; Pat Patterso?*>
entertainment; A lvin Armer,
food. '
Repp Advises
School Heads
on Employees
Plea Sent Out to Hire-Those
W ho Have Legitimate
Recommendations
By K. Rabogliatti
To discard all “ w il& a t” applica­tions
and make selections from a
reliable and carefully chosen list of
recommendations from the state-supported
agencies fo r recommen­dation
of teachers is the advice
given to all Arizona school o ffi­cials
by Dr. A. C. Repp, head o f
the placement bureau and the edu­cation
department here.
This plea is being sent out all
over the state in the May-June
1933 bulletin.
In this bulletin Repp emphasizes
the advantages o f using college,
bureaus whose business it is to
make careful recommendations of
teachers— such as avoiding incom­petence,
cooperating with state-supported
institutions, and exer­cising
economy.
Repp especially warned adminis­trators
against broadside recom­mendations
sent out by commercia'
agencies.
“ W e have no floaters and fa il­ures
in our lists,” he declared. “ A ll
o f the people we recommend are
competent and fu lly qualified.”
DR. G A M M A G E
GOES T O CH IC AG O
Dr. Grady Gammage le ft Tues­d
a y afternoon to attend the North
Central Association o f Colleges
and secondary schools to be held
in Chicago this,week. He w ill re­turn
in about a week.
Faculty Members Proclaim
Equality of Man is Mythical
sftoner or later gather in the sheck-els
o f the many, they do not be­lieve
that exactly the same people
would g e t it.
“ There are a great many weal­thy
people who inherited their
money or obtained it through some
source other than their own earn­ing
ability. These people would
not be apt to acquire it again/’ he
said.
But he believes Ford, the Rocke­fellers
and Schwab.would begin to
g et theirs back in a short time.
Dr. H ill like the others believes
that a few would get control o f
most o f the wealth under the pres­ent
system, but she doubts if the
same few would g e t it.
“ A great deal o f wealth is built
fln lutk and nothing else,” she
College Men of Company I Hunt Airmen
Capt. Pulliam’s Party Proves
It Is Efficiently Drilled
and* Officered
Encamp at Pine
Men are Equipped and Moving
Three Hours A fte r Gov.
Moeur Sent Order
C ollege- men numbering 47. all
members o f Company I, F la gstaff
unit o f the Arizonu national guard,
were ordered out by Governor
Moeur Wednesday afternoon to
)\elp search ftfr Carmel Giragi and
Jack Irish, who were found burned
to death in their plane near Wi
low Sunday after search which had
been carritW on without a letup for
seven days.
The company was under com­mand
o f Capt. C. T. Pulliam and
Lieutenant Rudy Lavik. Two
trucks, the college bus, anD one
private ear were drafted to furnish
transportation to the scene o f the
search. Each man was issued com-plpto
field equipment and all food
and other necessities w err~ takrn:
“ The -efficient and time-saving
methods used in mobilizing tl
guards and getting the equipme
ready and on the road are a credit
to Company I and to Captain. Pul­liam,”
said Glerin Kurzroek, second
liemcrrunt.
'Orders’ from Governor "M oeu r
ere received shortly a fte r 5 p. m.
Wednesday. Three hours later the
first party was On its way with
complete field equipment. An hour
later, the complete detail and food
:upplies and ojher necessities had
left F lagstaff.
Gompany I encamped near Pine,
from where searching parties were
sent out daily to comb the moun­tainous
regions fo r the lost fliers.
A fte r the finding o f the burned
plane by R. L. McNeil, Winslow
■hiet o f police, and Charles Os­borne,
state patrolman, some o f the
■ollege guardsmen returned to
F la gstaff Sunday night. Others
* delayed by.-a breken axle ir.
the bus. __ V — H l i - . ..
Psychology Class
H elps Carry Out
Arithm etic P ro jec t
Scoring arithmetic tests has tak­en
the place o f'c l ass work for psy>
ecology 95 stucfents during l)r.
Repp’s absence lalst week.
In conducting his experiment
throughout the state in arithmetic
tests Dr. Repp makes sure o f abso­lute'accuracy
in scoring by having
each paper, scpred fftur different
times, once by the teacher givin g
it and three, other times by people
at the\college. The final scoring
is to be done by Dr. Repp himself.
Since there are 900 papers each
psychology student has the pob of
scoring?from 12 to 40.
“ *»« in part o f an
extensive testing program carried
on by Dr. Repp during the past
year in the formation o f a new
course o f gtudy for the Arizona
schools.
Philippines Subject
International Relations Club
Meets Tomorrow-
Foreign .relations o f the United
States, especially with the Philip­pine
Islands, is to be the topic
o f discussion at the International
Relations club fleetin g Wednesday
evening. Bernice Robinson and
Marciano Fernandez w ill lead the
discussion.
Plans fo r a social meeting will
be discussed after the regular
meeting and also the possibility o f
holding meetings during the com­ing
summer session.
Speaks at College
Major Phillip Martindale will
talk here nett week on auimal life
and the natural wonders of Y e l­lowstone
Park.
Editors Ask
Open Mirul on
Eino Pajunen Wins
Student Treasurer
Job in Primaries
MARTINDALE WILL
TELL OF WILD LIFE IN
YELLOWSTONE PARK
Intim ate habits o f wild animal:
and tju* natural wonders o f Yellow
stone park w ill lectured <>n by
M aj. Phillip Martindale. chief
ger of the Old Faithful district.
Yellowstone park, at Ashurst audi­torium,
May 2, at 8 p. m.
M ajor Martindale has for many
years been a U. S. ranger and ran-goi'-
naturattst. tlirvp irrd raw upon
his many years of actual contact
with wild animals and his ex
ience as pioneer ranger and
dent of animal hatTits in their
a! state.
His .subject, handled as ah enter­tainment.
not a lecture, is humor­ous
besides being educational. He
has appeared before over 1,000,000
people- on the wonders o f nature
programs, besides the radie audi-
T Practically fiving with the greaF
H i t l o r K t x r i i n t l | w" iil,dd g« rrinzzzl]yy aanndd --bbllaacckk bbeeaarrss iinn
X X t H t l O i past years, his close-up study and
\ _______ / I his unusual platform g if t bring
ij,. Reagan (ie.s Let.er
Germany, Saying Reports H e w ill giv e details o f
Are Propaganda ( change af~grizzly kings where
--------- j o f the greatestN old grizzly bears
In order to stop tlu- current im- ; o f the Rockies^ Searface, after
pression that Germany has had a j years o f supremacy, was dethroned
pew government forced upon her j by a younger, g rizzly, Caesar J»e-the
editors of* the International fore 25 other b e a r ^ in a great
Review have-' sent letters to all
their subscribers requesting that
fight.
M ajor Martindale lives in the
they cooperate with Germany to greatest protected area o f wild
stop th e . popular expression.
The follow in g is a translation o f
the letter Dr. J. C. Reagan, head o f
the social science department, re­ceived:
“ W e hereby appeal to our for-ign
friends, earnestly requesting
them to give no credeijce to the
widely circulated rumoijs concern­ing
German atrocities. T h e change
of the national government has
been effected with such quiet ar|d
order that it cannot be called a
olution. Certainly teachers o f
i world and, .especial I y. the pub-.
Ushers, editors and subscribers for
the International R eview should do
all they can to.prevent the Inter­national
atmosphere being poison- '
ed against by this propaganda-against
Germany.
“ Signed:''Editors o f,th e Inter­national
Review.
Koelin, Germany, A p ril 3, 1933.
life in the world where wild ani­mals
seem to realize their protec­tion.
The park contains 13,000
elk, 600 bears,.including nbout 200
grizzlies, 300 moose, C50 antelope,
the only holfow-horned animal in
the world that sheds its horns, *100
deer, 1200 buffalo, 300 mountain
sheep, Canadian lynx, mountain
lions, wolverine and thousands of
other fur bearing animals.
The program is an entertain­ment
with humorous and tragic
tales interwoven, illustrated by the
griiatest collection o f ■pictures evyr
shown from the Rockies.
W H A T A N A T I O N --------
O F C H IL D R E N !
( N S F A )— Children o f kinder­garten
age in Spain are taught
flupncy in from three to four mod­ern
languages.
Instructor States
D a y-to -D a y W ork
Makes S u c c e s s
By Milo Webb
‘Most men who do not succeed
i n . the business world fail because
they canriot hr -depended- npon to
tW fff T tiT T tffflF -n r tfHr jWls,tl 1.*
H. Machlnn, history instructor, told
the freshmen ethics club Wednes­day.
•
Being employed fo r four years
hiring and training bond salesmen
for a large N ew York bonding
house, Machlan stated that he be­lieved
that he had an excellent op­portunity
fo r observing the quali­ties
that make men successful in
businesk, especially as salesmen.
I f I were to choose between a
n o f extraordinary, a b ility and
appearance but-with doubtful re­liability
and a man whose chief vir-was
dependability but who had
only average ability and appear-
, I would choose every time
the man who could be depended
upon/’ continued Machlan.
In closing, he added that he be­lieved
that sVicces's. in school life,
as in the business world, depend­ed
upon how hard and consistently
one worked.
niversity /toI
Hawaii holds one o f its extension
course schools on the rim o f a vol­cano,
so that the students can bet­ter
study botany, geology, and vol­canic
phenomena. *
Geologist Claims
Oil E xists H ere
in Payin g Am ount
“ The possibility o f finding tlil in
Arizona some day is qnite likely.”
John McGregor, geology and arch­aeology
instructor at A . S. T. C.,
toid his geology class last week.
According to McGregor, there
are several good prospects for oil
accumulations in differen t sections
o f’ the state. “ Geological form a­tions
in many parts o f Arizona cor-respond
closely to those o f other
states whenr-oil -has-been found,71
M rfiri'gnr further stated.
Arizona abounds in geological
formations, most o f the periods in
geological times being represented
and the possibility o f valuable eco­nomic
products underlying the sur­face
strata is excellent, McGregor
thinks.
Pi Gamma Mu Meets
Program to be Planned at
First Meeting This Week
The absence o f several -ef its
members at the regularly sched­uled
meeting time Thursday eve­ning
resulted in a postponement o f
the Pi Gamma Mu meeting untii
this week.
This w ill be the first regular
meeting o f the society and at it
•plans for interesting programs fo r
the remainder o f the year will be
made. I t is one o f the objectives
o f the club to have each of its
members w rite something relating
social studies
each year. These articles w ill be
read before the club before being
published. By this and other means
the club plans to promote interest
in the social sciences at A . S. T . C.
Howe, and Tidwell to Fight
It Out for Presidency
of Student Body
Elections Close
Treasurer Candidate Only One
to W in Out by Polling
Majority Vote
Kino Pnjunen, Miami, taking a
clear majority o f all votes cast,
won. xulL u.'v UcaiuTi!! ul AJbe stu­dent
body ig the election held on
Thursday. The two leading candi­dates
o f earh o f the other offices
will be listed for general election \
to Im> held Friday.
llen ry Howe and A ! Tidw ell were
selected as leading candidates fo r
president. Laura Saunders and
I)ora Erickson won out in the pri­maries
fo r secretary. 1 JobtTW yatt
and John Sullivan will fight it out '
for social manager, while “ Sun­beam11
Hrnlsnn and An-hie Beard....
were the two favored candidates
for yell leaders^ Pat Beecher and
Pat Patterson, The only two nomi­nees
fo r the vice-presidency, were
not entered in the primaries, but
will await the decision of voters in
the general.
H w a s reported “byUVe election
committee that, with the exception
o f the treasury race, votes were
scattered and the election tflose. An
«apocia!ly d o s t rnso -was run b y 1 ,
the two winners o f the presidential
primaries,, it beihg rumored that
Howe led his. opponent by less than
a dozen votes, r
Roland Henshaw, member o f the
election committee, said that a big
vote was cast, displaying plenty o f
interest among the studepts. T l.: •
number o f« votes cast, he said,
checked completely with the num­ber
o f registrants.
Literary Club to
IsHife P in e K nots
by This W eek-end
T h e 1W53 -*!tttron -of -Prne- Kiwts- -
will be bigger and better than ev-
\ according to Del Ward, edtior,
who stated further that plans in­cluded
mot'e poetry than, in the
past and a larger variety o f short
stories, sketches and essays.
As 600 copies are being printed,
ery student w ill receive one. The '
remainder will be sent out to^_^
schools over the state. T h e y w ill -'''
be ready for distribution thnj^pek-end.
v •
Pine Knots .issued annually, is
made up o f contributions by mem­bers
o f the L itera ry club, an in­form
al organization sponsored by
H ill to encourage creative
Writing. j .
Orchestra’Entertains
Collegians Play Favorites at
High School
The Lumberjack Collegians play­ed
‘at the F la g s ta ff high school
Wednesday afternoon. The pro­gram
consisted o f seven o f their
favorite numbers:
According to reports from mem­bers,
the Collegian orchestra was
a success with the high school
audience.
Week’s
Social Calendar
Tuesday— Mad Hatters Din­ner
Dance, Monte Vista.
Wednesday— International Re­lations,
Dr. j . C. Reagan’s home,
8 p .m . ^
Thursday-Sf.umberjack Col-
Saturday— Open Forum, Dr.
M. A. H ill’s hijtme, 7 p. m.
Saturday^-Collcge Picnic at
Lake M ary.

Is there such a thing as equal­ity?
Faculty members o f the college
do not seem to-think so.
Prof. A. C. Peterson started the
ball a-rolling in his class in sociol­ogy
when he said that there was
no such thing, that human beings
are' all different from birth and
that the difference is largely due
to heredity.
In proof o f this, he said:
“ I f all the money in the country
were divided equally one day, it
would all be on its way bacl( into
exactly the same pockets inside o f
48 ,hours."
Tom 0 . Bellwood, 'dean o f the
college, agrees with ,-I*rof. Peter­son.
— ^iA&.long.aa.aur economic.sygtfim
is based on money, prices, and p rof­it,
Mr. Peterson’s statement is
true,” he said.
Although Dr. M ary H ill and Dr.
J. C. Reagan agree w ith Peterson
and Bellwood that the fe w would
said, "and i f the lucky ones had
their money taken from them, a
great many o f them would stay
poor fo r the rest o f their lives. I
am certain that new tycoons would
arise, however," she said.
Cast You r
Vote
Friday
Tuesday, April 25. 1933
NORTH UNIVERSITY LIBRARY L i \ i « n » \
Friday.
Published by Associated Students
A R IZ O N A S T A T E T E A C H E R S C O L L E G E , F L A G S T A F F . A R I Z O N A Winslow High
Wins First in Tournament
Flagstaff Places Second ^to
Carry Off -‘V eil wood
Cup Prize
Snowflake 3rd
150 Students from 10 Schools
A re Guests of Local
Teachers College
Placing first among 10 northern
Arizona schools participating in
the annual district music and com­mercial
subjects, Winslow won the
cup presented by the college with
a total o f 63 points. F la gstaff was
second with 57 points and Snow­flake
ranked third with 45.
The Bellwood cup, offered by
Dean Tom 0 . Bellwood o f the
teachers college, went to F la g staff
as leuder among the northern A r i­zona
high schools in the business
instruction field. The music cup
was won by Winslow.
Ten high schools— Snowflake,
Winslow, Clarkdale, F la gstaff, St.
Johns, Seligman, Jerome, Williams,
tfotbrook and Cani£ Verde— enter­ed
approximately ISO studejnts.
Miss Edna Dptson, commercial
teacher at the college, was general
chairman. She was assisted by
Prof. Eldon A rdrey o f the college
music department, Miss Klonda
Lynn oM ^ p college speech arts de-
- partment. Clarence Brooksby, c
graduate student at the college,
and J. P. McV ey, principal Flag-sta
ff high school and secretary
Northern Arizona Interscholastic
as.iocin*;on.
Trombone— 1, J. B. Patterson, St.
Johns; 2, Juan Munez, Jerome;' 3,
Max Butler, Snowflake. v
> ’ Bb Cornet or Trum pet—1, W a l­ter
Kehoe, Jerome; 2, J e ff Hunt,
Snowflake; 3, Gabriel Rodriquez,
Winslow; 4, Ildefonso Vallejo, i
Bb Clarinet— I, Robert Bremren,
Winslow; 2, Dorothy Harrington,
F la gstaff; 3, Trinidad Castaneda,
Jerome; 4, Wanda Peterson, Snow­flake.
Eb Saxaphone— 1, A rg y le Shum-way,
Snowflake; 2, Fred Waites,
Winslow; 3, Joe Mullen, Jerome;,4,
Harlie Goss, Williams.
Men’s high voice— 1, V irg il W riU
mg, St. Johns; 2, A r lo w Hunt.
Snowflake; 3, Phillips Isham, Flag-
* s ta ff; 4, D. McBride.
Men’s low voice— 1, Robert
Woodburn, W inslow; 2, Philip Cha­vez.
Jerome; 3, June Davis, St.
Johns; 4, J. C. Fain, Williams.
G irl’s high voice— 1, La Rue
Maybin, St. Johns; 2, M argaret
Rudd, W inslow; 3, Fern Standifird,
Snowflake; 4, H arriet Branting-lmm,
Williams.
G irl’s low voice— 1, Jean Rich­ardson,
F la g staff; 2, Frances Stev­ens,
Winslow; 3, Luana Hall,
Snowflake; 4, A m y Farr, St. Johns.
Piano— 1, M ary Hutson, F la g­s
taff; 2, Cleora Day, W inslow; 3,
Annella Morris, Snowflake; 4, Ev-elyn
Cummings, Camp Verde.
C O LL E G E ST U D E N T S
W IL L H A V E A N N U A L
L A K E M A R Y .P IC N IC
Plans are complete fo r the an­nual
college jic v ir . to be held at
Lary Mary Saturday. I t will
be an all day a ffa ir and various
forms o f amusement have been
arranged for during the day, to
be climaxed by a dance in the
evening.
Students and faculty num­bers
will leave in busses and pri­vate
cars at nine o’clock in the
morning. The busses will make
two trips. * Students having pri­vate
cars are asked to cooperate
with Roland Hen'shaw and re­port
any room that they may
have.
A s in form er years, the com­mittees
are working to make
this the big event of the spring.
The picnic w ill last all day. A r ­rangements
have been made for
baseball, volleyball, horseshoes,
boating, umMf-ouyuivu U bra.vt*
enough they may indulge in a
swim. The food committee has
been busy getting a real feed
together.
Heads o f committees for the
A ffair * are Roland. Henshaw,
transportation; Pat Patterso?*>
entertainment; A lvin Armer,
food. '
Repp Advises
School Heads
on Employees
Plea Sent Out to Hire-Those
W ho Have Legitimate
Recommendations
By K. Rabogliatti
To discard all “ w il& a t” applica­tions
and make selections from a
reliable and carefully chosen list of
recommendations from the state-supported
agencies fo r recommen­dation
of teachers is the advice
given to all Arizona school o ffi­cials
by Dr. A. C. Repp, head o f
the placement bureau and the edu­cation
department here.
This plea is being sent out all
over the state in the May-June
1933 bulletin.
In this bulletin Repp emphasizes
the advantages o f using college,
bureaus whose business it is to
make careful recommendations of
teachers— such as avoiding incom­petence,
cooperating with state-supported
institutions, and exer­cising
economy.
Repp especially warned adminis­trators
against broadside recom­mendations
sent out by commercia'
agencies.
“ W e have no floaters and fa il­ures
in our lists,” he declared. “ A ll
o f the people we recommend are
competent and fu lly qualified.”
DR. G A M M A G E
GOES T O CH IC AG O
Dr. Grady Gammage le ft Tues­d
a y afternoon to attend the North
Central Association o f Colleges
and secondary schools to be held
in Chicago this,week. He w ill re­turn
in about a week.
Faculty Members Proclaim
Equality of Man is Mythical
sftoner or later gather in the sheck-els
o f the many, they do not be­lieve
that exactly the same people
would g e t it.
“ There are a great many weal­thy
people who inherited their
money or obtained it through some
source other than their own earn­ing
ability. These people would
not be apt to acquire it again/’ he
said.
But he believes Ford, the Rocke­fellers
and Schwab.would begin to
g et theirs back in a short time.
Dr. H ill like the others believes
that a few would get control o f
most o f the wealth under the pres­ent
system, but she doubts if the
same few would g e t it.
“ A great deal o f wealth is built
fln lutk and nothing else,” she
College Men of Company I Hunt Airmen
Capt. Pulliam’s Party Proves
It Is Efficiently Drilled
and* Officered
Encamp at Pine
Men are Equipped and Moving
Three Hours A fte r Gov.
Moeur Sent Order
C ollege- men numbering 47. all
members o f Company I, F la gstaff
unit o f the Arizonu national guard,
were ordered out by Governor
Moeur Wednesday afternoon to
)\elp search ftfr Carmel Giragi and
Jack Irish, who were found burned
to death in their plane near Wi
low Sunday after search which had
been carritW on without a letup for
seven days.
The company was under com­mand
o f Capt. C. T. Pulliam and
Lieutenant Rudy Lavik. Two
trucks, the college bus, anD one
private ear were drafted to furnish
transportation to the scene o f the
search. Each man was issued com-plpto
field equipment and all food
and other necessities w err~ takrn:
“ The -efficient and time-saving
methods used in mobilizing tl
guards and getting the equipme
ready and on the road are a credit
to Company I and to Captain. Pul­liam,”
said Glerin Kurzroek, second
liemcrrunt.
'Orders’ from Governor "M oeu r
ere received shortly a fte r 5 p. m.
Wednesday. Three hours later the
first party was On its way with
complete field equipment. An hour
later, the complete detail and food
:upplies and ojher necessities had
left F lagstaff.
Gompany I encamped near Pine,
from where searching parties were
sent out daily to comb the moun­tainous
regions fo r the lost fliers.
A fte r the finding o f the burned
plane by R. L. McNeil, Winslow
■hiet o f police, and Charles Os­borne,
state patrolman, some o f the
■ollege guardsmen returned to
F la gstaff Sunday night. Others
* delayed by.-a breken axle ir.
the bus. __ V — H l i - . ..
Psychology Class
H elps Carry Out
Arithm etic P ro jec t
Scoring arithmetic tests has tak­en
the place o f'c l ass work for psy>
ecology 95 stucfents during l)r.
Repp’s absence lalst week.
In conducting his experiment
throughout the state in arithmetic
tests Dr. Repp makes sure o f abso­lute'accuracy
in scoring by having
each paper, scpred fftur different
times, once by the teacher givin g
it and three, other times by people
at the\college. The final scoring
is to be done by Dr. Repp himself.
Since there are 900 papers each
psychology student has the pob of
scoring?from 12 to 40.
“ *»« in part o f an
extensive testing program carried
on by Dr. Repp during the past
year in the formation o f a new
course o f gtudy for the Arizona
schools.
Philippines Subject
International Relations Club
Meets Tomorrow-
Foreign .relations o f the United
States, especially with the Philip­pine
Islands, is to be the topic
o f discussion at the International
Relations club fleetin g Wednesday
evening. Bernice Robinson and
Marciano Fernandez w ill lead the
discussion.
Plans fo r a social meeting will
be discussed after the regular
meeting and also the possibility o f
holding meetings during the com­ing
summer session.
Speaks at College
Major Phillip Martindale will
talk here nett week on auimal life
and the natural wonders of Y e l­lowstone
Park.
Editors Ask
Open Mirul on
Eino Pajunen Wins
Student Treasurer
Job in Primaries
MARTINDALE WILL
TELL OF WILD LIFE IN
YELLOWSTONE PARK
Intim ate habits o f wild animal:
and tju* natural wonders o f Yellow
stone park w ill lectured <>n by
M aj. Phillip Martindale. chief
ger of the Old Faithful district.
Yellowstone park, at Ashurst audi­torium,
May 2, at 8 p. m.
M ajor Martindale has for many
years been a U. S. ranger and ran-goi'-
naturattst. tlirvp irrd raw upon
his many years of actual contact
with wild animals and his ex
ience as pioneer ranger and
dent of animal hatTits in their
a! state.
His .subject, handled as ah enter­tainment.
not a lecture, is humor­ous
besides being educational. He
has appeared before over 1,000,000
people- on the wonders o f nature
programs, besides the radie audi-
T Practically fiving with the greaF
H i t l o r K t x r i i n t l | w" iil,dd g« rrinzzzl]yy aanndd --bbllaacckk bbeeaarrss iinn
X X t H t l O i past years, his close-up study and
\ _______ / I his unusual platform g if t bring
ij,. Reagan (ie.s Let.er
Germany, Saying Reports H e w ill giv e details o f
Are Propaganda ( change af~grizzly kings where
--------- j o f the greatestN old grizzly bears
In order to stop tlu- current im- ; o f the Rockies^ Searface, after
pression that Germany has had a j years o f supremacy, was dethroned
pew government forced upon her j by a younger, g rizzly, Caesar J»e-the
editors of* the International fore 25 other b e a r ^ in a great
Review have-' sent letters to all
their subscribers requesting that
fight.
M ajor Martindale lives in the
they cooperate with Germany to greatest protected area o f wild
stop th e . popular expression.
The follow in g is a translation o f
the letter Dr. J. C. Reagan, head o f
the social science department, re­ceived:
“ W e hereby appeal to our for-ign
friends, earnestly requesting
them to give no credeijce to the
widely circulated rumoijs concern­ing
German atrocities. T h e change
of the national government has
been effected with such quiet ar|d
order that it cannot be called a
olution. Certainly teachers o f
i world and, .especial I y. the pub-.
Ushers, editors and subscribers for
the International R eview should do
all they can to.prevent the Inter­national
atmosphere being poison- '
ed against by this propaganda-against
Germany.
“ Signed:''Editors o f,th e Inter­national
Review.
Koelin, Germany, A p ril 3, 1933.
life in the world where wild ani­mals
seem to realize their protec­tion.
The park contains 13,000
elk, 600 bears,.including nbout 200
grizzlies, 300 moose, C50 antelope,
the only holfow-horned animal in
the world that sheds its horns, *100
deer, 1200 buffalo, 300 mountain
sheep, Canadian lynx, mountain
lions, wolverine and thousands of
other fur bearing animals.
The program is an entertain­ment
with humorous and tragic
tales interwoven, illustrated by the
griiatest collection o f ■pictures evyr
shown from the Rockies.
W H A T A N A T I O N --------
O F C H IL D R E N !
( N S F A )— Children o f kinder­garten
age in Spain are taught
flupncy in from three to four mod­ern
languages.
Instructor States
D a y-to -D a y W ork
Makes S u c c e s s
By Milo Webb
‘Most men who do not succeed
i n . the business world fail because
they canriot hr -depended- npon to
tW fff T tiT T tffflF -n r tfHr jWls,tl 1.*
H. Machlnn, history instructor, told
the freshmen ethics club Wednes­day.
•
Being employed fo r four years
hiring and training bond salesmen
for a large N ew York bonding
house, Machlan stated that he be­lieved
that he had an excellent op­portunity
fo r observing the quali­ties
that make men successful in
businesk, especially as salesmen.
I f I were to choose between a
n o f extraordinary, a b ility and
appearance but-with doubtful re­liability
and a man whose chief vir-was
dependability but who had
only average ability and appear-
, I would choose every time
the man who could be depended
upon/’ continued Machlan.
In closing, he added that he be­lieved
that sVicces's. in school life,
as in the business world, depend­ed
upon how hard and consistently
one worked.
niversity /toI
Hawaii holds one o f its extension
course schools on the rim o f a vol­cano,
so that the students can bet­ter
study botany, geology, and vol­canic
phenomena. *
Geologist Claims
Oil E xists H ere
in Payin g Am ount
“ The possibility o f finding tlil in
Arizona some day is qnite likely.”
John McGregor, geology and arch­aeology
instructor at A . S. T. C.,
toid his geology class last week.
According to McGregor, there
are several good prospects for oil
accumulations in differen t sections
o f’ the state. “ Geological form a­tions
in many parts o f Arizona cor-respond
closely to those o f other
states whenr-oil -has-been found,71
M rfiri'gnr further stated.
Arizona abounds in geological
formations, most o f the periods in
geological times being represented
and the possibility o f valuable eco­nomic
products underlying the sur­face
strata is excellent, McGregor
thinks.
Pi Gamma Mu Meets
Program to be Planned at
First Meeting This Week
The absence o f several -ef its
members at the regularly sched­uled
meeting time Thursday eve­ning
resulted in a postponement o f
the Pi Gamma Mu meeting untii
this week.
This w ill be the first regular
meeting o f the society and at it
•plans for interesting programs fo r
the remainder o f the year will be
made. I t is one o f the objectives
o f the club to have each of its
members w rite something relating
social studies
each year. These articles w ill be
read before the club before being
published. By this and other means
the club plans to promote interest
in the social sciences at A . S. T . C.
Howe, and Tidwell to Fight
It Out for Presidency
of Student Body
Elections Close
Treasurer Candidate Only One
to W in Out by Polling
Majority Vote
Kino Pnjunen, Miami, taking a
clear majority o f all votes cast,
won. xulL u.'v UcaiuTi!! ul AJbe stu­dent
body ig the election held on
Thursday. The two leading candi­dates
o f earh o f the other offices
will be listed for general election \
to Im> held Friday.
llen ry Howe and A ! Tidw ell were
selected as leading candidates fo r
president. Laura Saunders and
I)ora Erickson won out in the pri­maries
fo r secretary. 1 JobtTW yatt
and John Sullivan will fight it out '
for social manager, while “ Sun­beam11
Hrnlsnn and An-hie Beard....
were the two favored candidates
for yell leaders^ Pat Beecher and
Pat Patterson, The only two nomi­nees
fo r the vice-presidency, were
not entered in the primaries, but
will await the decision of voters in
the general.
H w a s reported “byUVe election
committee that, with the exception
o f the treasury race, votes were
scattered and the election tflose. An
«apocia!ly d o s t rnso -was run b y 1 ,
the two winners o f the presidential
primaries,, it beihg rumored that
Howe led his. opponent by less than
a dozen votes, r
Roland Henshaw, member o f the
election committee, said that a big
vote was cast, displaying plenty o f
interest among the studepts. T l.: •
number o f« votes cast, he said,
checked completely with the num­ber
o f registrants.
Literary Club to
IsHife P in e K nots
by This W eek-end
T h e 1W53 -*!tttron -of -Prne- Kiwts- -
will be bigger and better than ev-
\ according to Del Ward, edtior,
who stated further that plans in­cluded
mot'e poetry than, in the
past and a larger variety o f short
stories, sketches and essays.
As 600 copies are being printed,
ery student w ill receive one. The '
remainder will be sent out to^_^
schools over the state. T h e y w ill -'''
be ready for distribution thnj^pek-end.
v •
Pine Knots .issued annually, is
made up o f contributions by mem­bers
o f the L itera ry club, an in­form
al organization sponsored by
H ill to encourage creative
Writing. j .
Orchestra’Entertains
Collegians Play Favorites at
High School
The Lumberjack Collegians play­ed
‘at the F la g s ta ff high school
Wednesday afternoon. The pro­gram
consisted o f seven o f their
favorite numbers:
According to reports from mem­bers,
the Collegian orchestra was
a success with the high school
audience.
Week’s
Social Calendar
Tuesday— Mad Hatters Din­ner
Dance, Monte Vista.
Wednesday— International Re­lations,
Dr. j . C. Reagan’s home,
8 p .m . ^
Thursday-Sf.umberjack Col-
Saturday— Open Forum, Dr.
M. A. H ill’s hijtme, 7 p. m.
Saturday^-Collcge Picnic at
Lake M ary.